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1 Department of Radiology, University Hospital, UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School, 150 Bergen St., Rm. C-320, Newark, NJ 07103-2406.
Received February 24, 2000;
accepted after revision April 14, 2000.
Address correspondence to R. H. Wachsberg.
Abstract
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MATERIALS AND METHODS. A retrospective review was performed of normal findings on pancreatic sonograms of 25 consecutive lean patients without pancreatic disease who were capable of taking deep breaths. The anteroposterior diameter of the pancreatic duct in the body of the gland was measured at end-expiration and end-inspiration. A significant change was defined as a 1-mm or greater difference between the end-inspiratory and end-expiratory diameters for at least two of three consecutive breaths.
RESULTS. Seven patients (28%) had a significant increase in the diameter of the pancreatic duct at end-inspiration. These included four patients (16%) in whom the diameter of the duct was less than or equal to 2.5 mm (i.e., normal) at end-inspiration and three patients (12%) in whom the diameter of the duct was greater than 2.5 mm at end-inspiration.
CONCLUSION. The diameter of the pancreatic duct can increase during deep inspiration in some adults without pancreatic disease. This finding should be borne in mind as a potential pitfall during pancreatic sonography.
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Because of anecdotal observations that the diameter of the pancreatic duct sometimes increases during inspiration, a study was performed to evaluate the prevalence of the phenomenon in patients without evidence of pancreatic disease.
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Each patient was examined after having fasted for at least 4 hr. The body of the pancreas was identified via an epigastric window with the scan plane parallel to the long axis of the gland. The patient was instructed to completely exhale and to suspend respiration, and a long axis image was obtained of the pancreatic duct in the body of the gland. The patient was then instructed to take a deep breath and to suspend respiration, and another long axis image of the pancreatic duct was obtained. This procedure was repeated twice for a total of three breaths. On each image, the greatest anteroposterior diameter of the lumen of the pancreatic duct (i.e., inner-to-inner diameter) in the body of the gland was measured with electronic calipers.
End-expiratory and end-inspiratory measurements of the diameter of the pancreatic duct were compared for each of the three breaths. A difference of 1 mm or greater between end-inspiratory and end-expiratory measurements was defined as significant. If a significant change was elicited by all three breaths, the end-inspiratory and end-expiratory measurements were averaged. If a significant change was noted after two of the three breaths, it was assumed that the patient had not inhaled deeply for the breath that did not provoke a significant change, and data from that breath were discarded, whereas measurements from the two breaths that had provoked a significant change were averaged. If a significant change was elicited by only one of the three breaths, this was considered to be a nonreproducible chance event.
If a significant change in the diameter of the pancreatic duct was observed between end-expiration and end-inspiration, the transducer was rotated 90° to perform short axis sonography of the duct. The transducer was moved back and forth parallel to the long axis of the pancreas to confirm that true short axis images were being obtained, and a short axis sonogram was obtained where the anteroposterior diameter of the duct was greatest. On this image, the anteroposterior and cephalocaudad diameters of the pancreatic duct were measured and compared. The short axis configuration of the pancreatic duct was judged as circular if the difference between the anteroposterior and cephalocaudad diameters was less than 1 mm and as oval if the difference between the anteroposterior and cephalocaudad diameters was 1 mm or greater.
Sonography was performed with 128 XP-10 (Acuson, Mountain View, CA), 700MR (General Electric Medical Systems, Milwaukee, WI) or HDI (Advanced Technology Laboratories, Bothell, WA) scanners. Pancreatic sonograms were obtained with broadband convex array transducers at selected center frequencies between 3.5 and 5.0 MHz. All sonograms and measurements were obtained by a single experienced abdominal sonographer. Over the 2-month period during which the patients included in the study were examined, the abdominal sonography protocol called for images of the pancreatic duct to be obtained at both end-inspiration and end-expiration. Our study was approved by the institutional review board.
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In this study, the diameter of the pancreatic duct exceeded the 2.5-mm
upper limit of normal at end-inspiration in 12% of patients who lacked
clinical, laboratory, or imaging evidence of pancreatic disease and in whom
the end-expiratory diameter of the duct was normal. Had secretin been
administered to increase the sensitivity of sonography for obstruction of the
pancreatic duct, an additional 16% of patients (i.e., the 4 patients in whom
the diameter of the duct increased by 1 mm or more but was always
2.5 mm)
might have potentially been misdiagnosed as having an obstructed pancreatic
duct if presecretin measurements were obtained at end-expiration and
postsecretin measurements were obtained at end-inspiration. Such a
modification in technique might occur if different examiners performed the
presecretin and postsecretin sonographic examination or if the distribution of
bowel gas shifted during the interval between the two examinations so that a
deep breath was necessary to allow the pancreas to be visualized on the
postsecretin sonographic examination.
A mechanism whereby an increase in the diameter of the pancreatic duct might occur during inspiration is suggested. It is known that the pancreas is quite mobile during respiration [5, 6]. Bryan et al. [5] postulated and Kivisaari et al. [6] later confirmed that the excursion of the pancreatic tail during inspiration exceeds that of the remainder of the gland in healthy subjects, presumably because the tail extends into the lienorenal ligament and the spleen is displaced considerably by the descending diaphragm. If movement of the pancreatic tail during inspiration is not only caudad but also toward the midline because of displacement by the descending spleen, the result might be shortening of the long axis dimension of the pancreas. This result would shorten the length of the pancreatic duct because the duct is entirely surrounded by pancreatic parenchyma and spans the length of the gland. To accommodate the finite volume of fluid in the lumen of the duct, a decrease in the length of the duct would necessitate a concomitant increase in its diameter if Oddi's sphincter remained closed. During expiration, the duct would reassume its resting length, and elastic recoil would restore its diameter to the baseline value. This mechanism is similar to the one that has been proposed to explain the increase in diameter of the bile duct that occurs during inspiration in some healthy individuals [7].
One could alternatively consider the possibility that the normally circular cross section of the pancreatic duct might become oval (i.e., that the anteroposterior diameter increases and the superoinferior diameter decreases) during inspiration in some individuals. If true, such a phenomenon would cause an apparent increase in the diameter of the duct on transverse sonography because it is the anteroposterior dimension of the duct that is measured. However, short axis sonography confirmed that the cross section of the duct remained circular throughout the respiratory cycle in all patients in whom a significant change in diameter was observed during inspiration.
A limitation of this study is that a single non-blinded investigator performed all sonographic examinations and measurements. However, most sonographic examinations were observed by other experienced individuals who concurred that the diameter of the pancreatic duct did indeed increase. Because only healthy patients between 21 and 58 years old were studied, the conclusions may not apply to children or to older patients, in whom the duct is normally wider and possibly more compliant than in younger subjects [8]. Because only patients who could take a deep breath were studied, the prevalence of the phenomenon described is presumably lower in an unselected population than the 28% prevalence observed in the study population.
To summarize, the diameter of the pancreatic duct can increase substantially during inspiration in some healthy adults. This observation should be borne in mind as a potential pitfall during pancreatic sonography.
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